Writers on Wednesday: Ian Lipke
Welcome back to Writers on Wednesday. This week I am chatting with Australian author Ian Lipke.
Tell me a bit about yourself …
I became a teacher of primary children in 1958, transferring to
secondary schools in 1964. I have taught in schools in remote and metropolitan
areas of Queensland, Australia.
I left school teaching in 1977 to lecture
at the University of Queensland and at Queensland University of Technology.
Throughout the late 1980s and 1990s I was
a deputy principal at several high schools, before retiring to run my own
tutoring business.
In 2006 I returned to postgraduate studies
through research at the University of Queensland, gaining an M.Phil in the
process.
I have co-written two textbooks for older
school children, and at the time of writing, I am the immediate past president
and current secretary to the Management Committee of the University of the
Third Age, Brisbane.
I am also the editor of the ‘words’
section on Reviews – Media Culture a
publication of QUT's
(Queensland University of Technology) Creative Industries Precinct.
I have a wife, two children, and two
grandchildren.
My self-published novels include Nargun and Nathan, a two part series
focused on Australian aborigines in the nineteenth century and their troubled
relations with white settlers, crime procedural novels called Lest Evil Prevail and A Killer Calls. I have an unpublished
boy meets girl meets monster type novel called Trickle.
Tell us about your most recently
published book?
This
is A Killer Calls. A girl, daughter of an anal-retentive father is
forced into teacher training by his indomitable will. She meets Blue, a
policeman in training and falls in love. She ditches teaching and becomes a
police constable attached to a suburban police station. She is raped on the
job. Blue and his girlfriend Michelle, investigate. The tale becomes a dig
beneath the surface of a city to find the muck that law and order rest on.
Searching through the gangsters and the conmen, Blue and Michelle find a
murderer much closer to home than they could have imagined.
Tell us about the first time you were
published?
Omitting
the textbooks my first book published was Nargun, the story of a fictitious
aboriginal warrior who led the fight against early nineteenth century white
settlers. It is a love story and a study in cross-cultural relations too. Five
years in the writing, ten years in a drawer, the book was resurrected by a
friend who insisted I self-publish.
As writer, what has been your proudest
achievement so far?
My
answer to that would have to be Lest Evil
Prevail. Several critics gave it a big thumbs up. One has included his
critique on Amazon. The book generated a small amount of interest when it was
published by a press in the USA. It has gained greater sales since I moved my books
to www.kdp.com and CreateSpace.
What books or writing projects are you
currently working on, if anything?
Just
this morning I finished Trickle, a
story of a little dog whose fighting qualities inspired a boy and a girl to
stand against evil, and overcome a monster that had escaped from the pages of
Greek mythology to bring evil to the modern world.
Which do you prefer? eBooks or Paper
Books? Why?
Paper
books every time. I love the smell of a newly opened book, and I
love to sit and marvel at the books I have in my extensive library.
Indie Publishing, or Traditional
Publishing?
Traditional
publishing…but I have never been lucky enough to have a publisher accept my
manuscript. The competition is ridiculously tight. We’re forced into indie
publishing.
Aside from your own books, of course,
what is one book that you feel everybody should read?
Musth
by
Australian writer Fred Guilhaus. It is fresh and original, and is home grown.
Finally … is there anything you would
like to say to your readers in Adelaide, Australia?
Love,
sex and a sense of adventure are the key elements in a good fictional story. Adelaide
is especially blessed because Wakefield Press is on your doorstep. This
publisher produces fictional books that serve up all three human emotions and,
what is more, they produce non-fictional books of world standard…if only they
would publish my books.
Links
Lest Evil Prevail:
Nargun:
Nathan:
A
Killer Calls:
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